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The House-Monument of the Bulgarian Communist Party (usually referred to as the Buzludzha Monument) is located on the top of the 1400m Buzludzha Mountain in Bulgaria.

 

It is a stunning, world class, piece of architecture in a quite breath-taking location. But because it is so closely associated with Bulgaria's now despised communist regime, it is being left gently rot away.

 

This is at once both deeply sad, because the Buzludzha Monument truly is one of the modern wonders of the world, and understandably given the pain and anguish many people can't help but link with the organisation it was built to celebrate.

 

The architect was Georgi Stoilov, and more than 60 artists worked on the mosaics, statues and other art works. The monument opened in 1981, and closed just 8 years later when the Bulgarian communist regime collapsed in 1989.

 

Getting inside the monument was easy enough, at least it was with our guides to show us the way, and the inside is just as stunning as the outside. We even climbed the 18 story tower to the viewing platform at the top. It was exhausting, occasionally painful (I managed to crack my head twice on the way up!), but well worth the effort.

 

At the top of the tower are two red glass stars, one facing north and one facing south. They're almost 3 stories high (bigger than the stars installed on the Kremlin in Moscow) and in times long gone they were lit from within. It is said that the north facing star could be seen from Romania and the south facing star could be seen from Turkey.

 

Exploring Buzludzha was a truly unforgettable experience, particularly in the beautiful evening light.

 

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Here you can see one of the red stars at the top of the Buzludzha tower. It seems that the local rumour mill at the time Buzludzha was built thought they were made from rubies... they're not!

This Gatorade bottle caught my eye in the midst of this window.

The Main Library of Philadelphia has acquired many of my Philadelphia pictures. You can view them at:

 

libwww.freelibrary.org/digital/search/?q=drasin

suanola.org

Whipple Farm, Lower 9th Ward, New Orleans

ektar 25, expired

Nikon n90, 28-105mm f/3.5-4.5

This old Mercury Topaz that sits inside the Hanna Roundhouse has literally become a shit box for all the birds that reside there.

As soon as I saw this old barn with a broken window, I knew it was perfect for my entry for No.16 - Damaged, in 111 in 2011.

 

I used Topaz 4 to bring out some of the textures.

Sunderland, England, UK.

Remarkably, very few of the windows were actually broken.

Off Stewart Street, Dayton, OH

Once this was someone's thriving takeaway business.

Lake Lawn Metairie Cemetery in New Orleans

This was from the "permission tour" with Alison back in September of last year.

 

Holga 120N

Ilford Delta 100

Luminous vandalism

Illumination of urban revelry

Pixel decimation

Technophobia Brittania

Broken and on-Display

Dystopia Digital Insomnia

 

“We've all been raised on television to believe that one day we'd all be millionaires, and movie gods, and rock stars. But we won't. And we're slowly learning that fact. And we're very, very pissed off." - FIGHT CLUB[1999]

 

www.instagram.com/callumjoelphotography/

 

www.callumjoelphotography.com/

 

© This photograph is copyrighted. Under no circumstances can it be reproduced, distributed, modified, copied, posted to websites or printed or published in media or other medium or used for commercial or other uses without the prior written consent and permission of the photographer.

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